- Thursday, January 13, 2011, 18:46
- Celebrity Gossip
Recent photographs of Stephanie Seymour beach-walking with her son Peter Brant II made quite a lot of people gawk. They were locked in an embrace that certainly looked a bit too passionate for an everyday expression of family feelings.
Details
- Monday, January 10, 2011, 19:03
- News
This is a scientifically proved fact: looking at cooked red meat will make your man feel relaxed and tranquil.
Details
- Tuesday, January 4, 2011, 17:03
- Celebrity Gossip
It’s a matter of surmise what resolutions Emmett Cullen would have made for the year 2011, but we can have fairly accurate information about those of Kellan Lutz, straight from his hearts and the PEOPLE magazine.
Details
- Monday, December 20, 2010, 15:07
- News
While preparations draw on into Christmas Day, family scraps are piling up for a variety of reasons – the most frequent of them is the possession of the TV remote control, it has been found.
Details
- Tuesday, October 12, 2010, 5:59
- Relationships
Australian researchers have uncovered the secrets of family happiness and strong marital relationships - a husband should not show that he gets more pleasure from marriage than his wife.
Details
- Wednesday, October 6, 2010, 6:33
- Pregnancy
American sociologists argue that an only child in a family is seriously at risk of becoming a sociopath, - the Health journal wrote. In the course of a study, researchers found that children growing up without brothers and sisters are worse than their peers in adapting to a group in educational & reformatory institutions.
Details
- Thursday, September 23, 2010, 19:21
- Job & Career
According to a news review of the popular-science journal Science, Canadian scientists have discovered that in the modern world, a successful career breaks a happy family life.
Details
- Tuesday, July 13, 2010, 19:06
- Relationships
British psychologists carried out a research into how childhood bonds affect the person of a woman in adulthood, The Psychological Science reports.
Details
- Monday, July 12, 2010, 11:44
- News
American psychologists surprisingly concluded that our aggressiveness depends on having or nor having brothers and sisters and the sequence at which they were born, PLOS one magazine reports.
Details
- Monday, March 15, 2010, 17:43
- Relationships
The partners, who use "we" instead of "I" when talking to each other, tend to get through family issues with more ease. These findings are based on a study of conversations between 154 middle-aged and older couples conducted by researchers at University of California, Berkley.
It found that those couples who ...
Details